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Papers On U.S. History (20th Century)
Page 27 of 182

“Out of This Furnace”: A Review of the Book by Thomas Bell
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A 6 page discussion of the immigrant experience presented in this fictional novel based in a steel mill town in Pittsburgh at the turn of the century. Examines the importance of capitalism to the American dream. Explains the reflection of one of the primary characters in the novel that “bosses and bossin” were in need of dire change as not being critical of the macrocosm of capitalism as a whole only of the microcosm of the injustices of a particular workplace. No additional sources are listed.
Filename: PPfurnac.wps

“Political and economic restructuring in post-war Japan”
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A ten page paper which looks at the effects which the post-war occupation of Japan by the Allies, and particularly the USA, had on the country’s cultural, political and economic development in the subsequent decades, and the way in which the occupying forces were able to reconstruct the country’s imperialist heritage, religious practices and social reforms.
Bibliography lists 8 sources
Filename: JLJapocc.rtf

“Review of Major Problems in American History Since 1945 and Homeward Bound: American Families in the Cold War Era”
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A review of the major themes and concepts which are covered by the two texts, showing how the respective authors have taken an analytical perspective on the historical periods which they investigate.
Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: JLgriffmay.wps

“Review of Zinn’s ‘A People’s History of the US’ and Loewen’s ‘Lies My Teacher Told Me’”
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A paper which looks at two critiques of the way in which American history has been deliberately misrepresented by successive governments, and the resultant mythology which has been constructed by historians and presented as factual evidence.
Filename: JLUShist.rtf

“Salt of the Earth” (1954) -- More than a Blacklisted Film
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This
5 page report discusses the 1954 blacklisted movie that tells the
story of a strike among Hispanic mine workers at the Empire Zinc
Corporation in New Mexico. A Mexican American family finds
itself in the middle of the bitterness caused by the strike. As a
political statement, it demonstrated the inter-connection that
exists between working class, feminist, environmental and Latino
concerns, and yet it was denounced for its “communist overtones”
and banned from the public until the late 1960s. The movies
writers, producer, and director had all been blacklisted and the
star, the Mexican actress Rosaura Revueltas, was deported. No
additional sources.
Filename: BWsaltof.doc